Lakhu Prasad is a potter and Community Correspondent. Lakhu knows the true value of education for a person belonging to a Dalit community. He grew up in a community of potters, in an environment rife with caste discrimination and untouchability. Despite the odds, he earned a BA degree in Economics, Political Science and History. “The ‘lower’ caste members who manage to get an education forget about their community and the pottery profession. This is how untouchability continues,” he laments. More recently, potters in his community are facing heightened hardships because of fibre replacements and a shortage of clay and firewood.…

As the government stubbornly sticks to promoting expensive genetically modified seeds for corporate profits, one man has started a quiet revolution, reviving traditional agriculture in Madhya Pradesh, a state with one of the highest numbers of farmer suicides.

The septuagenarian Babulal Dahiya recalls that in his childhood there were vast varieties of indigenous crops in his native Pithurabad in Madhya Pradesh. These gradually reduced to only a few bio-engineered varieties thanks to the green revolution. A retired postmaster, he decided to start collecting and preserving the indigenous seed varieties of paddy by growing them in his field. Today he has managed to save over 100 varieties of indigenous paddy.

The green revolution in the 1960s was the introduction of capital-intensive mechanised farming using engineered seeds and replacing organic methods by intensive methods using tractors, pesticides and chemical fertilisers. Promoted as a way to end hunger, green revolution today stand debunked as a failed experiment that caused untold harm to the environment and as directly responsible for the indebtedness of farmers causing mass farmer suicides in India. Babulal says, “In Madhya Pradesh maximum farmer suicides are related to the soya bean crop. The reason for this is soya bean is a completely capital intensive crop which is geared towards the market. Farmer suicide is unheard of in traditional organic farming”.

Babulal’s organisation, Sarjana Social Cultural and Political Forum, caters primarily to the needs of two Adivasi areas in Santa District: Pachmari and Machgaon in Madhya Pradesh. It promotes traditional agriculture in Madhya Pradesh’s 30 villages out of the 84 villages in the block. This initiative was started at a dire time when the farmers of these villages were in debt trap owing to expensive genetically modified and high-yield varieties of seeds which were expensive themselves and needed expensive inputs like pesticides and chemical fertilisers.

Organic farming works simply because the use of a variety of indigenous seeds which are suited to local climatic conditions like drought help reduce harvest failures. Babulal’s organisation has done experiments to demonstrate how traditional agriculture in Madhya Pradesh benefits farmers. They planted hybrid paddy seeds and alongside an indigenous variety. The indigenous variety, Nevali, was ready for harvest in 90 days and required much less water. The high yield variety (IR36) took 120 days and needed thrice the amount of water.